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Current anti-diabetic treatment fails to stop the progressive course of the disease. Recent studies have revealed a surprisingly high variability in the diabetic phenotype. The investigators propose that anti-diabetic treatment should ideally target the underlying pathophysiology of each individual patient. The investigators will therefore test whether the effect of two approved anti-diabetic drugs differs between individuals at different ends of the pathophysiological spectrum: 1) patients with poor insulin secretion, here termed SIDD and 2) patients with high insulin resistance, here termed SIRD. The study may open up a new avenue for more precise treatment of diabetic patients that would be of immediate clinical relevance.
Full description
The trial is a clinical phase II study that will be randomized and open-label with fixed stratification variables (SIDD and SIRD) to analyze if the response to anti-diabetic drugs differs between patients with distinct pathophysiology, as captured by SIDD and SIRD. The compounds used are semaglutide and dapagliflozin, which will be randomized to patients of each subgroup using a parallel group design.
The clusters (SIDD and SIRD) will be used as a practical tool to distinguish individuals who are at different ends of the pathophysiological spectrum.
The investigators will recruit 200 patients from the ANDIS registry with HbA1c ≥42 mmol/mol on metformin monotherapy. Half of them will have SIDD and half will have SIRD characteristics. The patients will be randomized (open-label) to receive semaglutide or dapagliflozin for six months in addition to metformin.
The investigators will recruit participants on metformin monotherapy with stable dose for the last three months. Metformin dose at inclusion (as prescribed by their regular physician) is maintained throughout the study; the investigatorswill correct for metformin dose in the analyses. Patients randomized to add semaglutide will receive injection training at the study site and inject 0.25 mg subcutaneously once weekly during the first four weeks, followed by 0.5 mg weekly for the subsequent four weeks and finally 1.0 mg weekly throughout the study. Those randomized to dapagliflozin will receive 10 mg orally once daily in addition to metformin. The participants will attend a screening visit followed by three study visits at 0, 3, 6 months. At the first and last study visit they will undergo an OGTT. HbA1c will be measured at all study visits.
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Inclusion criteria
• Diabetes mellitus based on prior documentation or treatment with anti-hyperglycemic medication or diagnosed according to the WHO criteria (random plasma glucose >11.1 mmol/L or fasting glucose >7.0 mmol/L or HbA1C ≥6.5%) and disease characteristics typical for SIDD or SIRD according to the ANDIS clustering
Exclusion criteria
• Type 1 diabetes, LADA, MODY, secondary diabetes or history of diabetic ketoacidosis
Primary purpose
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200 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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